An alien woman from a closed world seeks asylum aboard Voyager, claiming she's been there before and that she and Chakotay were lovers, but no one remembers her.An alien woman from a closed world seeks asylum aboard Voyager, claiming she's been there before and that she and Chakotay were lovers, but no one remembers her.An alien woman from a closed world seeks asylum aboard Voyager, claiming she's been there before and that she and Chakotay were lovers, but no one remembers her.
Roxann Dawson
- Lt. B'Elanna Torres
- (credit only)
Tarik Ergin
- Lt. Ayala
- (uncredited)
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I would like to use the neurogenic emitter in me to forget that I watched this episode
There is a some sort of pheromone that allows these people to interact with others, spend time and even become close. And have that completely fade after a short period of time. It's not made clear why or how this chemical tool was developed or whether it just something evolved. But it serves the purpose of allowing these people to keep their world and their tools completely secret. Apparently Robert Beltran found this to be his favorite episode. Sadly since this is only story, and we don't have that pheromone or devices to wipe memories. I won't be able to put this very weak story from my memory, damn.
Yes, this episode has many plot holes and reviewers are rightly frustrated that little detail is offered about Kellin's biological processes that render others' memories unable to capture her. But I don't think it is fair to ask for less focus on the love story.
Chakotay has gotten the short end of the stick with personality-expanding episodes, or maybe it just feels that way because of how stoic he is. Because of his unemotionality, the Vulcan Tuvok actually gets a lot of attention surrounding his emotional reactions to events. Chakotay has certainly been the star of multiple episodes by this point late in season 4, but he has been fading into the background, seeming more impassive even than the Vulcan. He is a stalwart piece of furniture on the bridge.
Chakotay's major traits are his loyalty and strong work ethic, so much so that the only times viewers see him passionate are when he cares deeply about solving an engineering or diplomatic problem his own way. When we discover he had a fling with Seska, it is only relevant because his work ethic and loyalty cause him to want to protect Voyager all by himself.
If anything, "Unforgettable" did not offer enough scenes of this man feeling feelings.
Chakotay has gotten the short end of the stick with personality-expanding episodes, or maybe it just feels that way because of how stoic he is. Because of his unemotionality, the Vulcan Tuvok actually gets a lot of attention surrounding his emotional reactions to events. Chakotay has certainly been the star of multiple episodes by this point late in season 4, but he has been fading into the background, seeming more impassive even than the Vulcan. He is a stalwart piece of furniture on the bridge.
Chakotay's major traits are his loyalty and strong work ethic, so much so that the only times viewers see him passionate are when he cares deeply about solving an engineering or diplomatic problem his own way. When we discover he had a fling with Seska, it is only relevant because his work ethic and loyalty cause him to want to protect Voyager all by himself.
If anything, "Unforgettable" did not offer enough scenes of this man feeling feelings.
Virginia Madsen stars as Kellin in this very unusual episode of "Star Trek: Voyager". After she has a brief fight with another ship very close to Voyager, Kellin contacts Voyager and asks for help from Chakotay specifically. Oddly, however, Chakotay doesn't recognize her. Soon you learn why--she's from a species that doesn't want outside contact and they go to very extreme lengths to keep it that way. If anyone leaves the planet, they are tracked down and anyone having contact forgets and their computers are wiped! Kellin insists that she'd spend a lot of time on Voyager and then proves this DID occur. So why, then, does she return? Well, it seems that Mr. Super-Sexy, Chakotay, has stolen her heart and she's here to seek asylum.
The notion of a world that goes to such extremes to keep its existence private is pretty unique. My only complaint is that having a cop whose job it is to bring in runaways then falling in love and wanting to defect is a bit hard to believe. Additionally, she KILLED her own kind in escaping and no one seemed to remember this or care. Odd...but still a good episode.
The notion of a world that goes to such extremes to keep its existence private is pretty unique. My only complaint is that having a cop whose job it is to bring in runaways then falling in love and wanting to defect is a bit hard to believe. Additionally, she KILLED her own kind in escaping and no one seemed to remember this or care. Odd...but still a good episode.
No pun intended. This was a very forgettable episode. First of all, there is the absurdity of the premise. An attractive woman asks for asylum aboard Voyager. Once she is there, she speaks of a love relationship with Chakotay. It turns out she is from a planet where the beings are forgotten by anyone with whom they've had contact after a short time As it happens, the two fall in love again, but there is a problem on board. It's so far fetched, even for this series, that I was happy when it ended.
Did you know
- TriviaDirected by Andrew Robinson who played Garak on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993).
- GoofsWhilst examining Kellin in Sickbay, the Doctor visually diagnoses a "tibular fracture." The two bones in the lower leg are the tibia and the fibula. Any injury would therefore be either a "tibia fracture" or a "fibular fracture." There is no such thing as a "tibular fracture."
Details
- Runtime
- 46m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3
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